Definition of Lymphadenopathy virus
Lymphadenopathy virus: Another
name for the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), the cause
of AIDS. HIV has also been called the human lymphotropic
virus type III and the lymphadenopathy-associated virus
and the lymphadenopathy virus. No matter what name is
applied, it is a retrovirus. (A retrovirus has an RNA
genome and a reverse transcriptase enzyme. Using the
reverse transcriptase, the virus uses its RNA as a template
for making complementary DNA which can integrate into the
DNA of the host organism). Although the American research
Robert Gallo at the National Institutes of Health believed
he was the first to find HIV, it is now generally accepted
that the French physician Luc Montagnier (1932-) and his
team at the Pasteur Institute discovered HIV in 1983-84.
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